Stop Procrastinating Today with These Simple Hacks
Okay, so stopping procrastinating is basically my personal Everest. Iām writing this in my cramped Chicago studio, where the air smells like stale pizza and my cat, Pickles, is glaring at me from a pile of laundry Iāve ignored for weeks. My desk is a warzoneāhalf-empty energy drink cans, a notebook with ādo taxesā written like 50 times, and a pen I chewed to death. Iām a total disaster, but Iāve scraped together some hacks to beat procrastination that actually work for me, a human whoās epically flawed. Hereās my messy, honest take on how to stop procrastinating, with a few screw-ups along the way because, like, Iām not a robot.
Why I Canāt Stop Procrastinating (Or So I Thought)
I used to think I was just ābad at lifeā when it came to procrastination. Like, last Tuesday, I was supposed to call my landlord about a leaky faucet, but instead I spent two hours on X watching videos of people organizing their fridges. Why? Itās like my brain sees a task and hits the panic button. Psychology Today says procrastinationās often about fear of screwing up or just feeling overwhelmed, and Iām like, yup, thatās me. Iām scared Iāll mess up, so I just⦠donāt start.
My apartment doesnāt help. Itās all creaky floors and flickering lights, and my desk looks like a tornado hit it. But admitting Iām stuck is the first step to kicking procrastinationās butt.

Hack #1: The Two-Minute Rule to Stop Procrastinating Now
This oneās a lifesaver: if it takes less than two minutes, do it right now. Sounds dumb, but it works. Like, yesterday I was avoiding texting my friend about dinner plans. Two minutes, right? So I grabbed my phone, sent a quick āyo, you free Friday?ā and done. No more overthinking. James Clear says starting is the hardest part, and Iām living proof.
My Dumb Mistake
I tried this with āquicklyā cleaning my kitchen. Spoiler: I spent 15 minutes rearranging forks instead. Keep it actually two minutes, yāall.
Hack #2: Chop Tasks into Tiny, Ridiculous Bits
Big tasks make me wanna hide under my bed. Writing this blog? Terrifying. So I break it into stupidly small steps, like āwrite one sentenceā or āopen my laptop without crying.ā Last week, I had to prep for a Zoom meeting, and I was paralyzed. So I told myself, āJust open the companyās website.ā Then, āWrite one note about their goals.ā Boom, I had a whole prep sheet.
Forbes calls this micro-tasking, and itās legit. Itās like tricking your brain into thinking itās no big deal.
Hack #3: Use a Timer, But Make It Weird
Iām all about the Pomodoro technique, but I make it chaotic. Set a timer for 25 minutes, go hard, then take a five-minute break to do something ridiculousālike eat a spoonful of peanut butter or scroll X for cat memes. I use a beat-up egg timer shaped like a chicken (found it at a thrift store), and its annoying cluck motivates me. Last month, I powered through emails with this, then rewarded myself with a TikTok of a dog in sunglasses.
Lifehacker loves this method, and I get it. Itās structure, but fun.

My Timer Fail
Once, I set the timer and got sucked into a YouTube rabbit hole about conspiracy theories. Two hours later, zero work done. Hide your distractions, people.
Hack #4: Bribe Yourself Like a Toddler
Iām not ashamed to admit I bribe myself to get things done. Finish a report? I get a burrito from the food truck downstairs. Last Friday, I promised myself a Netflix binge if I finished a freelance gig. Worked like magic. Harvard Business Review says rewards can rewire your brain, and Iām here for it. Just donāt bribe yourself with stuff you canāt afford, like, uh, my recent DoorDash addiction.
Hack #5: Call Out Your Lame Excuses
Iām the king of excuses. āIām too tired,ā āIāll do it better later,ā āI need to watch one more episode first.ā Last week, I avoided scheduling a dentist appointment because āitās too stressful.ā So I wrote every excuse on a napkin and crossed them out. Tired? Chug coffee. Later? Nope, now. Stressful? Deal with it.
Inc.com says calling out excuses makes them look dumb, and itās true. Itās like arguing with a whiny version of yourself.

Hack #6: Get an Accountability Buddy (Even If Theyāre Annoying)
Find someone to nag you. My friend Sarah texts me daily to check if Iāve done my work. Sheās relentless, and I hate it, but it works. Last month, she bullied me into finishing a blog draft because she wouldnāt stop sending me GIFs of disappointed puppies. Find someone whoāll call you outāitās like having a personal drill sergeant.
Hack #7: Change Your Environment
Sometimes, my apartment is the problem. The couch screams ānap time,ā and my fridge begs me to reorganize it. So I drag myself to a coffee shop down the street. The hum of strangers and smell of overpriced lattes somehow make me focus. Last week, I wrote half this blog at a cafĆ© while eavesdropping on a couple arguing about pizza toppings. Fast Company says a new environment can reset your brain, and Iām sold.
My Coffee Shop Screw-Up
I once went to a cafĆ© to āworkā and spent an hour people-watching instead. Bring headphones to block out distractions, trust me.
Hack #8: Forgive Yourself for Sucking
Hereās the realest one: stop beating yourself up. I used to spiral when I procrastinated, like, āIām such a failure.ā But that just made it worse. Last night, I didnāt finish a task, and instead of hating myself, I was like, āOkay, you screwed up, try again tomorrow.ā TED says self-forgiveness helps you move on, and itās true. Be kind to your messy self.
Conclusion: Stop Procrastinating, You Got This (Kinda)
Iām not some productivity god. Iām just a guy in Chicago with a cat who hates me and a desk thatās a health hazard. These hacksātwo-minute rule, tiny tasks, weird timers, bribes, excuse-busting, accountability buddies, new vibes, and self-forgivenessāhelp me stop procrastinating, even if I trip over my own feet sometimes. I still waste time (like, I paused writing this to google āsloth bobbleheadā), but Iām getting better. Try one of these hacks, maybe the two-minute one, and see what clicks. Whatās your trick to kick procrastination? Hit me up on XāIām @GrokTheChaos, probably avoiding my inbox.